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Now WiFi network has covered almost every corner in our life. That means, every smartphone user may need to connect to different WiFi networks in different places. As a result, accurately remembering these unlike WiFi passwords has become a problem. In another case, when you need to reconnect to or connect a new device to some wireless network and you just forgot the password, to get the password once more is also a trouble thing. I guess you would not like to ask somebody else or the network administrator for the password every time. In such cases, a tiny and handy mobile app can make things much easier.

WiFi Password Reader is a tiny and free Android app developed by David Schulte from Germany. It is specially designed to easily view all successfully connected WiFi passwords in a mobile device with Android OS. Its fundamental principle is: every time it successfully connects to some wireless network, Android OS automatically uses (or generates if you never connected a WiFi before) a configuration file (a simple text file that requires root permission to access) to save the plaintext (i.e.: unencrypted) WiFi info (SSID and password). Therefore, as long as we find, read and parse this file, we can get those passwords back.

As a matter of fact, in addition to using software, there are two manual ways to view the successfully connected WiFi passwords in your Android OS:

First, backup your WLAN using some data backup app; then enter the data backup folder to open some file with name like wifi*, wpa* using a text viewer. You will see all WiFi passwords listed inside (this method does not require root permission)

There is no doubt that the better way, of course, is to use a special software to finish this job.

// System Requirements //

Require root privilege

Support Android 2.2+

// Prompts //

For Samsung users: Some devices (mostly from Samsung) save the network key no longer as clear text, but as a hash. This value can not be converted back to plain text form! At the moment I can not detect such devices automatically and the app shows only the hash as key. Known devices with this problem are: Samsung Galaxy S3/S4, Samsung Galaxy Note 2/Note 3.

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